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Reading a Thunder Word

It was my luck, just when I summoned enough courage to read out loud a page of Finnegans Wake at the reading group, to come upon a “Thunder Word”: “Bladyughfoulmoecklenburg-whurawhorascortastrumpapornanennykocksapastippata-ppatupperstrippuckputtanach, eh?  You have it alright.”

This particular word was made up of words that had to do with “whore”.

There were ten Thunder Words in the book, each one was made up of 100 letters, except the last word, which had 101 letters.  The total number of letters added up to 1001—which reminded us of the continuous stories in the Arabian Nights.

I wonder if Scheherazade reads Finnegans Wake to her husband whether her head would be on a plate the next morning…

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Joycean Night

Two events were happening simultaneously on opposite sides of town, both celebrating the birthday of James Joyce.  I had to choose between going to Jack Hirschman’s Readers Cafe at Fort Mason, or join a group plow-through of Finnegans Wake at a friend’s home.  I went to Fort Mason, where Hirschman featured Jack and Adelle Foley paying tribute to “Germ’s Choice”.

Joyce’s river in Finnegans Wake morphed into two magma lavas.  They flowed side by side in discordant tempos and when they pinged, syllables bounced off in all directions, stinging the listeners, confusing their ears, jamming their computation demanding total surrender to the voices, words, chorus (of two, if you are counting bodies).  Then all of a sudden, when their multi-rhythms began to take over the room, they stopped.

The lavas mutated back into the river, Bussoftlhee, mememormee!  Till thousendsthee. Lps.  The keys to.  Given!  A way a lone a last a loved along the

Photo by Rhy Tranter.

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Taking Joyce Out

It was raining, and the popular Java Beach Cafe had a line running out the door.  Dan Brady and I had passed another cafe about a block away that looked pleasant and empty and decided to try it.  Can’t remember the name of it now—something like Beach Cafe—with southern food like fried chicken and waffle; and a cotton candy machine.  We found a nice corner in front of a shelf full of books and I took out Joyce’s Finnegans Wake.  Dan and I would use the book to jump start some poetic exercises.

Three women came over and sat at the table next to us.  As I read a passage from the book, Dan began to write.  I noticed at one point the women had stopped talking.  They were attracted by the obscurity of my recitation as I navigated precariously from word to word, sounding out long running syllables, short exclamations, pausing at combinations that befuddled the mind.  After two pages of reading I stopped.  Then it was Dan’s turn to read while I wrote.  At the end of his reading we read to each other what we had written and laughed at the strangeness of our “poems” that seemed to vibrate with a raw energy.

“Excuse me.”  One of the women leaned over.  “We have been watching you reading and writing.  It seems like you are playing a most wonderful game.”

We talked about Finnegans Wake, how its obscurity helped us not to get stuck on the narrative but listen to the words and sounds and that propelled us to write down what we heard.

“Would you like to try?”  I proposed.

They laughingly declined.  “But you’d be sure we’ll be talking about you for days to come.”

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On Dublin Street

Jack Foley played me a recording of James Joyce reading Finnegans Wake.  I had no expectation, as I had never read the book nor heard Joyce read.  The voice came on, gentle, musical, drawling and at times whimsical.  Joyce was impersonating two women washing by the river bank.  I found myself nodding at the rhythm of the words without understanding, laughing at a vague impression of women talk while shlepping clothes into the water, or on a rock, or a washer board.   I fell in love with Joyce.

That was a timely opening, and I’m more convinced than ever that things don’t happen as isolated incidents.  A week later I found out about a Finnegans Wake reading group from Sydney Clemens.  The group has been meeting once a month.  Last night I joined them.  They were up to page 79 after two years.  Someone read a paragraph.  We then freely associate and wildly interpreted with the help of two books of analyses/commentaries.  After two hours we stopped on the top of page 81, before an extra long paragraph that would carry on and on for pages.

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